The show kicked off at 1 p.m. Eastern time. However, I didn’t turn in until 2 p.m. But hey, when I did, I took notes as I listened for an hour, interested to hear what “Questlove Supreme” had to offer.

2:03 p.m. I tune in, just in time for Questlove to say that they’re taking a break to go eat some fried chicken and then, coming as not much of a surprise, he plays Michael McDonald’s “Sweet Freedom” from the ’80s buddy cop comedy Running Scared.

2:05 p.m. The white dude funk of McDonald is followed by…what the heck…is this…”Too Many Colors?”

Hold on, I need to Google this. *Googles “Too Many Colors* Hey, it turns out the song, performed by the late Teena Marie and featured on the track was none other than a 7-year-old Maya Rudolph. Yeah, crazy, huh? See Rudolph’s dad was Richard Rudolph, who was an influential producer and songwriter in the late 1970s and 1980s, and worked with everyone from Stevie Wonder to A Tribe Called Quest and her mom was soul singer Minnie Ripperton, who most famously sang “Lovin’ You.”

2:09 p.m. Coming off a discussion about the style and spirit of 1970s soul music, Questlove points out that a lot of that has found its way into Rudolph’s comedy and acting.

2:12 p.m. NAME-DROPPING ALERT. Rudolph casually mentions that she met the Jacksons (as in the Jacksons) in the late 1970s and one of the Jacksons (not Michael, he was too shy) helped her with her math homework. I bet it was Jermaine.

2:13 p.m. Here’s a fun fact for you, Stevie Wonder’s autograph includes his thumb print. Predictably Questlove tried to cop that move when he was younger.

2:18 p.m. Maya talks about her first musical loves and for a second, thinks that her first love might have been Duran Duran. But on second thought, she leans toward Stewart Copeland of the Police. It’s also at this point that I start to realize that this is less of a radio show per say and more of a podcast. I also realize that there might not be anything wrong with that.

2:2o p.m. Now they start talking about Prince and they talk a lot about Prince. This makes sense. Questlove has never been one to shy away from a Prince-related conversation. Rudolph is also a big Prince fan — as she’s in a cover band herself — and shocks the room with her admission that her father took her to see Purple Rain. Questlove says he wasn’t able to see the movie, recalling that Prince was essentially the devil in his house.

2:23 p.m. If you’ve read Questlove’s memoir, Mo’ Meta Blues, then you know that growing up, he was a good kid. Black Thought was the trouble-maker, while Questlove was the music nerd. Questlove is the music nerd. This comes up in the Prince-discussion with Questlove talking about how he was never out late, never strayed, obeyed the rules and when he was told to come straight home from school, he came right home.

2:24 p.m. When it came to watching MTV in the early 1980s, Questlove was just patiently waiting for a video from one of his favorite black acts.